Living a few insulated miles inland, it's easy to forget the power of Lake Michigan.

I’ve recently been making the drive up the coast to the charming tourist town of St. Joseph. The road that hugs the coast to one degree or another periodically exposes a view of the wonder of this Great Lake.

While a pleasure most times of the year, experiencing the fury of sideways snow from gusts that rip off the lake with the force of a high-speed rail train is a new experience that evokes awe. Visibility permitting, seeing white cap rollers to the horizon, a byproduct of the fierce winds that make it nearly impossible to open a car door, evoke a description — ‘Edmund Fitzgeraldy.’

This raw living energy is an extension of the same power that animates you, beating your heart and breathing your body. Insulated by the details of everyday living, it’s easy to forget. When you can ‘get on top of the wave’ and begin to understand and align with this, a sense of personal worthlessness and the ego's shallow attempts at compensation begin to loosen their grip.

On a lighter note, when describing the winter weather to a fellow traveler, he quipped, 'It's a good thing you drove instead of taking the ore boat in.'​

PS: If you have a question or would like to leave a comment, please click on the comment box below or social media icons to share with your snowbirding friends!

Leave a Reply.

​Author

Catherine Lenard is a personal development book/seminar author, and the founder and facilitator of The Divine Riches Project. Mission? Teaching universal Life Empowerment tools and principles that empower you to consciously change your life (and have some fun along the way)!

Note:When The Divine Riches Project web site was recently updated, years of blog posts didn't translate into the new format. We apologize if you were trying to find an archived post. As there are no 'accidents,' this coincides with starting fresh for 2016!

Legal stuff:No part of this blog may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any way or by any means including copying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods or by any information storage or retrieval system, without written permission from the author.​